, 2006-01-11
U.S. wiretapping laws, FISA and Presidential powers given to the NSA to intercept communications make for interesting times when coupled with technology. What are the issues surrounding privacy, search, seizure and surveillance?
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Wiretapping, FISA, and the NSA
2006-01-12
Anonymous from OZ (2 replies)
Anonymous from OZ (2 replies)
Wiretapping, FISA, and the NSA
2006-01-12
Mark (1 replies)
Mark (1 replies)

If you put together the publicly-available information, it's pretty easy to conclude that the NSA is using a some derivative of the Total Information Awareness (TIA) initiative that John Poindexter put together back in the late nineties. This implies that the NSA is quite possibly dealing with thousands, if not tens-of-thousands of concurrent phone calls, fax transmission, email intercepts, etc. They're using voice recognition and pattern matching to mine what is probably petabytes worth of data in near real-time. The model of surveillance they're using doesn't lend itself to warrants.
Take a look at Ars Technica's excellent article on the subject for speculation about the technology being used by the NSA.
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20051220-5808.html
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